Noun - Case: Encyclopedia II - Noun - Case, number, and genderIn sentences, noun phrases may function in a variety of different ways, the most obvious being as subjects (performers of action) or objects (recipients of action). For example, in the sentence "John wrote me a letter", "John" is the subject, and "me" and "letter" are objects (of which "letter" is a noun and "me" a pronoun). These different roles are known as noun cases. Variant forms of the same noun—such as "he" (subject) an ...
See also:Noun, Noun - Case, number, and gender, Noun - Classification of nouns, Noun - Proper nouns and common nouns, Noun - Count nouns and mass nouns, Noun - Collective nouns, Noun - Concrete nouns and abstract nouns, Noun - Nouns and pronouns Read more here: » Noun: Encyclopedia II - Noun - Case, number, and gender |